YanchaOkami
Esteemed Citizen of ZV
139981
That's correct, but if we stay on this personal interest and hobby: You wouldn't need more than a few thousand $s or €s per month to do this basically all the time, the whole year long.
If you want to have 2 to 3 houses in very good shape and with lots of features, even big pools and so on.. you wouldn't need more than a few thousand to maybe twenty thousand $s/€s per month to gather those in quite a small time span (around 10 years for 2-3 villas).
What I talk about is the extreme difference between the 0,7-0,8% or how much it might be nowadays and the remaining 60-70% which are quite poor, while the 30%+ are somewhat able to take a longer aspect of realizing their goals - but without going very cost-effective and saving ways to do this (as example: learn how to do it and build your goals yourself - by your hands).
And in the top ~1% there's more or less all they would need for a life with all relevant(!) features and possibilities available after some hours of "working" (mostly: "waiting for others to work so they profit from it").
A few hours. Some people make the yearly median income of a two person working household in 17 seconds. How would you actually spent this? And how would you be able to not only "show off" (that's easy and you don't even need much money for it, actually), but to enjoy those goods? They won't have time to enjoy all the goods they might gather around.
And the more they gather, the more their wealth grows, the less they actually bond emotionally with all that stuff.
This is a big loss, a grave loss I would say. If they can't bond with whatever they buy, because for them it's of no "value in their life", then how would they enjoy their time with it to the fullest? How to reflect a part of their life invested in a goal - which they did not do and as such can't really feel - while using the acquired goods?
I personally would love infinite money, yes. But I wouldn't go around and just buy any and everything I see. Because it would be a very, very hollow life, a life where there was nothing of my existence really bond to anything else of personal value to me. Nothing really touches one if you don't value it's worth. It's just "there", but never "part of your being".
At the end such people which "have just too much whenever they want it" - and I don't talk about skiing trips
- will die and not experience even the value and companionship of a quite poor person which keeps a few sled dogs and a small hut somewhere in a colder region and works together with those to fulfill life's necessities.
That's what I see as "hollow": If you don't take your time to even think twice about some decision, but just play a game with "infinite money" cheat, it will get hella boring, you'll miss half the opportunities, 100% of all emotional bonding with personally worked-on goals and so on.
That's correct, but if we stay on this personal interest and hobby: You wouldn't need more than a few thousand $s or €s per month to do this basically all the time, the whole year long.
If you want to have 2 to 3 houses in very good shape and with lots of features, even big pools and so on.. you wouldn't need more than a few thousand to maybe twenty thousand $s/€s per month to gather those in quite a small time span (around 10 years for 2-3 villas).
What I talk about is the extreme difference between the 0,7-0,8% or how much it might be nowadays and the remaining 60-70% which are quite poor, while the 30%+ are somewhat able to take a longer aspect of realizing their goals - but without going very cost-effective and saving ways to do this (as example: learn how to do it and build your goals yourself - by your hands).
And in the top ~1% there's more or less all they would need for a life with all relevant(!) features and possibilities available after some hours of "working" (mostly: "waiting for others to work so they profit from it").
A few hours. Some people make the yearly median income of a two person working household in 17 seconds. How would you actually spent this? And how would you be able to not only "show off" (that's easy and you don't even need much money for it, actually), but to enjoy those goods? They won't have time to enjoy all the goods they might gather around.
And the more they gather, the more their wealth grows, the less they actually bond emotionally with all that stuff.
This is a big loss, a grave loss I would say. If they can't bond with whatever they buy, because for them it's of no "value in their life", then how would they enjoy their time with it to the fullest? How to reflect a part of their life invested in a goal - which they did not do and as such can't really feel - while using the acquired goods?
I personally would love infinite money, yes. But I wouldn't go around and just buy any and everything I see. Because it would be a very, very hollow life, a life where there was nothing of my existence really bond to anything else of personal value to me. Nothing really touches one if you don't value it's worth. It's just "there", but never "part of your being".
At the end such people which "have just too much whenever they want it" - and I don't talk about skiing trips
That's what I see as "hollow": If you don't take your time to even think twice about some decision, but just play a game with "infinite money" cheat, it will get hella boring, you'll miss half the opportunities, 100% of all emotional bonding with personally worked-on goals and so on.